SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-l2l9-97T5
JOSEPH VENTRESCO and
STEPHEN J. TOBER,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
GOKVLESH CONVENIENCE, INC.
t/a M&S CONVENIENCE STORE,
Defendant-Respondent,
and
VINCENT TORRESSee footnote 1,
Defendant.
_______________________________________________________
Submitted January 26, l999 - Decided February
24, 1999
Before Judges Long, Kestin and Carchman.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Monmouth County.
Drazin and Warshaw, attorneys for appellants
(John R. Connelly, Jr., on the brief).
Stephen E. Gertler, attorney for respondent.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
LONG, P.J.A.D.
Joseph Ventresco and Stephen J. Tober (jointly "plaintiffs")
appeal from the grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant
Gokvlesh Convenience, Inc. t/a M&S Convenience Store in connection
with the complaint plaintiffs filed against defendant for
negligence. Plaintiffs' complaint arose out of injuries they
received in a fracas in front of defendant's grocery store in Long
Branch.
Defendant moved for summary judgment on the ground that it
owed no duty to plaintiffs who were assaulted outside the store.
In opposition to the motion, plaintiffs asserted the following
facts, appearing in their sworn deposition testimony. On July l7,
l994, plaintiffs entered M&S Convenience Store along with a friend,
Nicholas Suozzo, after a bike ride. As they entered, they
encountered another group of men leaving the establishment. One of
the men bumped into Suozzo who said, "excuse me." The other man
then cursed Suozzo, gestured at him obscenely, left the store and
ultimately left the area in a car with his group. Subsequently,
plaintiffs and Suozzo purchased their items and left the store.
When they emerged, both the store's parking lot and the sidewalk in
front of the store where they had left their bikes were empty.
Suddenly, cars began to pull up, including a car with the men from
the prior encounter. Other groups of men converged and eventually
a crowd of twelve or more arrived.
Ventresco sensed that there would be trouble, went into the
store, and asked the store employee to call the police. The
employee did not respond; the police were not called. Ventresco
returned to the parking lot, and thereafter he, Tober and Suozzo
were assaulted by the crowd. Ventresco was struck in the head with
a belt buckle causing him to bleed. He ran inside the store and
again appealed to the store employee to call the police. The
employee did not do so, instead indicating that he knew the men in
the other group and that he would talk to them. Tober was punched
in the head several times. Plaintiffs tried to fight back by
throwing bottles at their assailants. Tober tried getting back
into the store, but "the guy inside the store pushed me out and
held the door closed." Ventresco verified that the store worker
pushed them out and held the door against them. Eventually the
police arrived but not before plaintiffs had sustained injuries.
As might be expected, defendant's version of events was
entirely different from that related by plaintiffs. M&S indicated,
for example, that its employee tried to stop the argument; that it
was only when plaintiffs started throwing the store's stock of
beverage bottles at their assailants that the employee kept them
out of the store; and that at that point, he in fact called the
police.
For the purposes of the summary judgment motion, the facts had
to be viewed in a light most favorable to the non-moving party. R.
4:46-2. Defendant thus accepted plaintiffs' version and argued
that, on plaintiffs' facts, as a matter of law, no duty was owed.
The trial judge agreed. Plaintiffs appeal. We reverse.
In moving for summary judgment, defendant relied on Butler v.
Acme Markets, Inc.,
89 N.J. 270 (l982) and Clohesy v. Food Circus
Supermarkets, Inc.,
293 N.J. Super. 2l7 (App. Div.), rev'd, l
49 N.J. 496 (l997). Butler and Clohesy both affirmed the well-established principle that the proprietor of a commercial
establishment has a duty to use reasonable care to make the
premises safe and to protect its patrons from assault by employees
or others. See also Brody v. Albert Lifson & Sons, Inc., l
7 N.J. 383, 389 (l955). Butler and Clohesy both involved a criminal
assault on a patron outside the presence of the store owner. Each
turned on the question of whether the store owner should have
foreseen the assaults and protected against them. In Butler, the
court held that because a number of similar assaults had occurred
at the Acme Market, the crime was foreseeable and the store owner
had a duty to protect against it. Butler, supra, 89 N.J. at 275.
In Clohesy, a divided panel of this court held that because prior
similar criminal acts had not occurred in the supermarket parking
lot, the crime was not foreseeable and the defendant owed no duty
to the plaintiff. Clohesy, supra, 149 N.J. at 501. In reversing
the Appellate Division opinion, the Supreme Court held that the
question of whether a duty exists is not dependent upon the
existence of prior similar incidents even though foreseeability is
a driving consideration. Instead, the totality of circumstances
controls the question of duty. Id. at 508.
Despite the fact that both parties here argued the case in
terms of foreseeability, that is not the issue. Here, the store
employee was actually present during the entire encounter and
observed the assault on the patrons. This case falls directly
within the Restatement (Second) of Torts §344, l963-64:
A possessor of land who holds it open to the
public for entry for his business purposes is
subject to liability to members of the public
while they are upon the land for such a
purpose, for physical harm caused by the
accidental, negligent, or intentionally
harmful acts of third persons or animals, and
by the failure of the possessor to exercise
reasonable care to
(a) discover that such acts are
being done or are likely to be done,
or
(b) give a warning adequate to
enable the visitors to avoid the
harm, or otherwise to protect them
against it.
[Restatement (Second) of Torts, Sec. 344, 1963-64 Main Vol.).]
Comment (f) to this Restatement section adds:
f. Duty to police premises. Since the
possessor is not an insurer of the visitor's
safety, he is ordinarily under no duty to
exercise any care until he knows or has reason
to know that the acts of the third person are
occurring, or are about to occur.
[Restatement (Second) of Torts, Sec. 344 at
225-226, Comment (f) (l963-64 Main Vol.)
(emphasis added).]
Whether the proprietor's awareness of danger to the customer is
such that it will subject him or her to liability is a question of
fact. All that is required is sufficient information to apprise
the proprietor of the existence of danger and enough time to act on
behalf of the patron's safety. Dubak v. Burdette-Tomlin Memorial
Hosp.,
233 N.J. Super. 44l, 459 (App. Div. l989) (holding that a
tavern owner, if time allows, must contact the police in the event
of a disturbance in order to prevent injury to patrons). See Gould
v. Taco Bell,
722 P.2d 511, 515 (Kan. 1986) (holding the "sequence
of conduct" was sufficient for liability where the employee
observed loud, offensive comments by the assailants for several
minutes prior to the attack on the patrons and watched the verbal
and physical altercations yet made no effort to stop them or call
the police despite repeated pleas by the victims); Kimple v.
Foster,
469 P.2d 281, 281 (Kan. 1970) (holding a tavern owner
liable for plaintiffs' injuries from assault by other patrons for
failing to call the police even though tavern employees were
repeatedly urged by plaintiffs and other patrons to do so because
"trouble [was] expected"); Atkins v. Frazell,
470 So.2d 505, 514
(La. Ct. App. 1985) (holding proprietor breached duty owed to
patrons when manager heard vicious verbal exchange between patron
and assailant, heard assailant threaten patron with physical
violence, witnessed assailant retrieve a weapon, and "watch[ed], as
an interested spectator, the brutal beating" instead of calling the
police); Eastep v. Jack-in-the-Box, Inc.,
546 S.W.2d 116, 119-20
(Tex. Civ. App. 1977) (holding restaurant liable for plaintiffs'
injuries because restaurant employee failed to call the police
after plaintiffs were taunted by a raucous group at a neighboring
table for several minutes and subsequent physical violence ensued).
See also, Joan Teshima, Annotation, Tavernkeeper's Liability To
Patron For Third Person's Assault,
43 ALR 4th 28l, §9[a] (l986).
Here, the store employee (according to plaintiffs' version)
knew plaintiffs' assailants; observed the encounter in the store;
saw that the assault was about to occur; and stood by while it
actually did occur. Plaintiffs asked for the police to be called
(which the employee acknowledges he delayed in doing) and to be
harbored safely within the store when the assault began. According
to plaintiffs, the store employee did none of these things. In our
view, it was for the jury to determine what actually occurred and
whether the action the store employee took was adequate under the
"totality of circumstances" to meet his duty to provide safe
commercial premises. Clohesy, supra, l49 N.J. at 520. Summary
judgment should not have been granted under the standards of Brill
v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., l
42 N.J. 520 (l995).
The judgment is reversed and the matter remanded for trial.
Footnote: 1 Vincent Torres is allegedly one of the assailants, who was neither located nor served in this matter.